Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (2024)

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (1)

I’m out of control, you guys…

Since my foray into homemade sauerkraut earlier this year, I’m now on a kick to ferment everything…

I have to admit, it helps that I’m no longer scared of the whole process, and have learned that fermented foods don’t taste gross– as long as they are done right.

My homemade fermented ketchup boosted my confidence even further, so I hunted down some pickling cucumbers at the Farmer’s Market (the ones in my garden aren’t ready yet…) and have dove head-first into the salty world of old-fashioned brined pickles.

And my oh my, I am so glad I did.

But first, in case you’re wondering about the whole brined pickles vs. fermented pickles vs. vinegar pickles thing, here’s a quick run-down:

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (2)

Three Ways to Make Pickles

  • Fermented/Brine Pickles: These are the ones we’re making today. Fermented pickles rely on good old-fashioned salt and beneficial bacteria to make things happen. The best part about a fermented pickle recipe? It’s easy to make as little (or as much) as you need, and they are packed-full of probiotic benefit.
  • Vinegar Refrigerator Pickles: These guys are also simple to make, however, they will be lacking in the probiotic department. Instead of using the fermenting process, refrigerator pickles rely on vinegar for that traditional pickle tang. Learn more about quick pickles and find a great brine recipe in my article here.
  • Traditional Canned Vinegar Pickles: I’ve made a whole lotta canned pickles in my preservation career thus far. The benefits of canned pickles is that you can put up big batches at once and they will be shelf-stable for long periods of time. The downside? The high-temps ruin any beneficial bacteria and a lot of the nutrients. They can also be mushy if you aren’t careful. Check out my 5 Best Tips for Crispy Crunchy Pickles before you can your pickles for some ideas on how to prevent mushy home-canned pickles.

Why Use an Airlock Fermenting System?

Airlocks make the fermenting process even more fool-proof (especially for beginners) by reducing the the chance of mold, and allowing the ferment to release gases without you having to “burp” it. Can you ferment without an airlock? Sure, but to me, an airlock seems like cheap insurance for a better end result.

There are a number of air lock systems out there, but I’ve been lovingthe Fermentools system.It fits right onto mason jars so I don’t have to buy a bunch of special jars, and it makes it easy to makebigbatches (I did several 1/2 gallon jars with this pickle recipe, and it didn’t take any extra work or equipment to make it happen). I’ve been working with Matt from Fermentools for a while now and he’s been totally helpful as I’ve navigated my first adventures into fermenting.

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (3)

Fermented Pickle Recipe

You will need (per quart jar):

  • Small pickling cucumbers*
  • 1-2 cloves garlic
  • 1 tablespoon mustard seed
  • 10 peppercorns
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1-2 heads of fresh dill (or 1 tablespoon dill seed, if you prefer)
  • Sea salt and water to make 2% brine solution (instructions below)

*It might be tempting to try to use the larger, slicing cucumbers to make pickles, but don’t. They are mostly water and will give you a mushy, limp result. Your local farmer’s market should have loads of pickling cucumbers if you can’t grow them yourself, and you’ll be glad you went to the extra trouble to find them. Here are my best tips for keeping your pickles super crunchy.

How to Make 2% Brine:

Dissolve 1 tablespoon fine sea salt in 4 cups non-chlorinated water. If you don’t use all of the brine for this recipe, it will keep indefinitely in the fridge.

I always use sea salt for my brines, but kosher salt or canning salt will work too. Just avoid iodized salts (learn why in my Cooking with Salt article).

The finer the salt, the less stirring you must to do to dissolve, which is niiiiiiice.

The Fermented Pickle Recipe:

Start with very clean jars.

Add the garlic, mustard seed, peppercorns, bay leaf, and dill to each jar.

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (4)

Wash your cucumbers thoroughly and discard any that are mushy or soft. Remove the blossom end from each cucumber, and pack them into the jars. I prefer to leave my cucumbers whole, as it seems to give a crunchier end result.

Cover the cucumbers completely with the 2% brine solution.

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (5)

Add a weight to the jar to keep the cukes from floating to the top. (I use the handy glass weights from Fermentools, but you can get creative with whatever you have on hand.)

Add the air lock assembly (or regular lid if that’s what you’re using), and set aside to ferment at room temperature for 5-7 days. Keep in mind, the warmer your kitchen, the faster the fermenting process.

After the initial fermenting process is over, remove the airlock, cover with a regular lid, and store at 32-50 degrees for up to six months. (I’m keeping mine in my fridge.) The pickles will continue to slowly ferment and improve in flavor during the storage process. After about six months, they will start to slowly degrade, but will absolutely still be edible. However, I’m betting they’ll be long-gone before then.

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (6)

Fermented Pickles: What’sNormal?

Your fermented pickles might look a little bit different than the home-canned pickles you’re used to.

Here’s what to expect:

  • Cloudy brine, often getting cloudier as time progresses.
  • Fizziness! Fizzy pickles are totally normal and just a sign things are working as they should.
  • Liquid leaking out of the jar. Again, this is a normal process of fermentation. However, you can sometimes avoid it by making sure you don’t add too much brine to your jars.
  • Lots of bubbles = happy pickles
  • Pleasant sour taste. Fermented pickles have a slightly different tang than vinegar pickles. However, my kiddos are still gobbling them up.

If your ferments ever end up with a disgusting or putrid smell, that’s a good indication to toss them.

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (7)

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (8)

Fermented Pickle Notes:

  • Want to keep things super simple? You can ditch everything in this recipe but the cucumbers and brine. Seriously! That’s the best thing about pickles– tailor them to your taste preferences and what spices you have on hand.
  • Want super-crunchy pickles? Follow the tips in this post.
  • My Fermentools airlocks makes it super easy to make larger batches of pickles– especially in my half-gallon jars. However, if you only have a handful of cukes, you can still jar them up to ferment in small batches.
  • Can I use whey in my ferments? Yes, some folks use raw whey in their fermented vegetable recipes to jump-start the fermenting process. However, I haven’t found whey to be necessary, and I like the flavor a simple salt brine brings to a recipe.

More Fermented Food Recipes & Tips:

  • How to Use a Fermenting Crock
  • Fermented Ketchup Recipe
  • Pickled Green Beans Recipe
  • How to Make Sauerkraut
  • How to Make Dairy Kefir
  • How to Make Kombucha

Where to Buy Fermenting Stuff?

I’ve been totally impressed with myFermentoolsequipment. Here’s why:

  • The airlocks work with the jars I already have.
  • You can easily make big batches of fermented foods with little hassle (no lugging around heavy crocks, either)
  • Their glass weights are super nice to justpop into my mason jars so the food doesn’t float out of the brine and get gross.
  • There’s a super-handy chart on the front of their ultra-fine powdered salt bags to help you figure out exactly how much you need for the perfect brine

Shop the online store at Fermentools HERE.

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (10)

This post is sponsored by Fermentools, which means they sent me one of their air lock systems so I could try it out. However, like everything I promote here on The Prairie Homestead, I don’t promote it unless I’m actually using it and loving it, which is absolutely the case here.

Homemade Fermented Pickle Recipe | The Prairie Homestead (2024)

FAQs

What is the salt to water ratio for fermented pickles? ›

It equals 7 grams of salt per 1 cup of water. Or, 1 heaping teaspoon salt (1 1/4 teaspoon salt ) per 1 cup of water. This ratio allows one to drink the brine (like a shot) because it is not too salty and is designed for a shorter fermentation period ( 3-5 days). Crunchy, lightly fermented pickles!

How to tell when fermented pickles are done? ›

2) Allow your ferment to go for 7 days untouched. After a day or two, you will start to see bubbles, and the brine will become cloudy. This is the beneficial bacteria doing their job! 3) Taste your ferment on day 7 with a clean fork.

What improves pickle firmness for fermented pickles? ›

Lime is a source of calcium. Calcium improves pickle firmness. Food-grade lime may be used as a lime-water solution for soaking fresh cucumbers 12 to 24 hours before pickling them. Excess lime absorbed by the cucumbers must be removed to make safe pickles.

Which pickles have the most probiotics? ›

So, what you want to look for are unpasteurized fermented pickles, which can be found in the refrigerated section of grocery stores, often in the cheese section. It is always good to double-check the label as well. If vinegar or pasteurized is indicated on the label, chances are probiotics are absent.

Can you put too much salt in brine for fermentation? ›

Salt in fermentation encourages the growth of healthy bacteria, while at the same time kills off bad bacteria. We need to be precise when measuring the salt and water, especially when fermenting vegetables that will be submerged in brine. Too much salt may kill off all the bacteria, thus preventing fermentation.

What is the best pickling ratio? ›

The classic ratio is super easy to remember and is easily scale-able depending on how many pickles you're making. It's 100% vinegar, 50% water, 25% sugar and 12.5% kosher salt by weight. So for example, 200g vinegar, 100g water, 50g sugar and 25g kosher salt (again, you can scale this up or down!).

How can you tell that your fermented pickles are not safe to eat? ›

If it feels very soft and mushy, or the texture is different than usual, they're definitely not safe to eat. If you're ever unsure or if you feel like your pickles might be bad, it's always better to err on the side of caution. Remember, to avoid foodborne illness — when in doubt, throw it out.

Why did my fermented pickles turn to mush? ›

If the pickles are soft, they are spoiled from the yeast fermentation. Don't use them. Using too weak a salt brine or vinegar solution may cause soft or slippery pickles, as can using moldy garlic or storing the pickles at too warm a temperature.

How to know if ferment is bad? ›

A spoiled ferment will smell rancid, like rotting broccoli. A good ferment will have a pleasant sour smell. Note: If there's Kahm Yeast present it may have a strong smell, but once scraped away it should have a pleasant sour smell if it's not spoiled. A spoiled ferment may be slimy in texture.

How do you keep pickles crisp when fermenting? ›

Add a fresh grape leaf, oak leaves, cherry leaves, horseradish leaves, a tea bag, loose leaf tea, green banana leaf, or bay leaves to your brine. The tannins prevent the cell walls from breaking down, leaving a crunchy pickle.

Why are my fermented pickles bitter? ›

Why do pickles have a strong, bitter taste? This happens when you use old spices, cook too long in vinegar, or you use too much spice. Use fresh spices – use whole spices within 3-4 years of purchase. Use the processing time and method recommended in the tested fresh preserving recipe.

Should fermented pickles bubble? ›

The lactic acid fermentation process produces lactic acid bacteria that create gases when they feast on the vegetables. These gases are often visible as bubbles throughout the jar after a few days at room temperature and are a good sign.

What is the difference between pickled and fermented? ›

An easy way to remember the difference between the two despite their overlap is that pickling involves putting food into an acidic brine to produce a sour flavor, whereas fermenting gives food a sour flavor without any added acid. Pickling is often the least healthy choice in terms of these two foods.

Can I drink pickle juice for a probiotic? ›

Pickle juice can contain large amounts of lactobacillus, one of several healthy gut bacteria. This bacterium is one of many probiotics, which are beneficial to your overall health. However, most commercially available pickle juice has been pasteurized, meaning the bacteria it once contained are now inactive.

What is the healthiest pickle? ›

Fermented dill pickles are made with salt and not vinegar, so by comparison they are milder than vinegar pickles which contain acetic acid. These are the gut healthy, microbiome-boosting superfood pickles that you should be consuming everyday, three times a day.

What is the ratio of salt to water for fermentation? ›

Our rule of thumb for salt in vegetable ferments is 1-3 tablespoons per quart of water.

What is the best salt concentration for fermentation? ›

Generally, we recommend using 2% of the weight or volume of the ingredients in salt in your lacto-fermentations. (See How to Choose Between Brining and Dry Salting to find out whether you should calculate from weight or volume). To remember: The less salt (1 to 2% salt), the faster the fermentation.

How much salt per gallon of water for pickles? ›

Make 2 gallons of 5% brine. For the brine, dissolve ¾ cup pure un-iodized granulated salt per gallon of water. *Iodized salt causes pickles to be mushy and liquid cloudy when bottled.

What is the concentration of salt in pickles? ›

Brine pickles

Brine is used for vegetables that are naturally low in water. A 15-20% salt solution is prepared by dissolving salt in water. Vegetables are submerged in the brine using weights to hold them under the solution and the container is sealed.

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